Civil service panel agrees to LSU hospital deals

BATON ROUGE (AP) — The Civil Service Commission reversed course Monday and agreed to privatization plans for four LSU hospitals,

with nearly 4,000 layoffs set to take effect June 23.

Just over 3,500 employees work at the four hospitals, and 2,953 are classified, or rank-and-file, employees. The

others are unclassified workers who do not have civil service job protection.

The majority, nearly 1,700 employees, are at the Interim LSU Hospital in New Orleans. Another 220 are at W.O. Moss Medical Center in Lake Charles, 487 are at the University Medical Center in Lafayette and 556 at Leonard J. Chabert Medical Center in Houma.

The commission's 3-2 vote was the final step needed for Gov. Bobby Jindal to turn over management of university-run hospitals to private hospital operators in the local communities.

The decision changed course from less than a week earlier, when the commission stalled the plans. Members said they needed more details about financing arrangements to determine if the state would save money and gain efficiencies from the deals.

After the rejection, the Jindal administration and LSU provided additional paperwork. On Monday, Michael Kaiser, chief executive officer of the LSU Health Care Services Division, and other administration officials described the financing arrangements

in a broad overview.

Kaiser said a reduction in federal Medicaid

financing to the state — most of which Jindal decided to levy on the LSU

public

hospital system — would have shuttered services across the

facilities and left the university system seeking private "partners"

to help fill the funding gap. He listed a series of service

closures that had been considered before the lease deals.

"These would have all been devastating cuts

to each of these communities, but I'm sad to say these would not have

been sufficient,"

to close the entire Medicaid funding reduction, he said.

Commission member Scott Hughes said since

the last meeting, lawmakers approved a budget for next year that assumes

the privatization

of the hospitals, so he said rejection of the deals would leave no

dollars available to operate the hospitals through LSU.

"If we were to deny these contracts, we will not be able to provide these services to the citizens. I believe these hospitals

would close," he said.

Jindal is seeking to privatize nine of the 10 LSU hospitals and affiliated clinics that care for the poor and uninsured and

that provides training sites for many of Louisiana's medical students.

The governor's top budget adviser,

Commissioner of Administration Kristy Nichols, said all of the

privatization deals would

save the state an estimated $100 million annually, while also

preserving graduate medical education and services to the uninsured.

Hughes said he still had questions about some of the numbers provided by the Jindal administration and concerns about whether

federal officials will sign off on some of the Medicaid financing needed to make the budget plans balance.

But he and other members of the commission,

which is the state's human resources agency, said their review was only

allowed

to determine whether the privatization could save the state money

and to ensure the deals weren't motivated by political considerations.

"I think the evidence has been presented that this is economical and efficient," said commission member Lee Griffin.

The commission is charged with overseeing layoff plans for contracts that would privatize the work that had been done by state

employees.

Kaiser said nearly 4,000 employees work at

the four hospitals and will be laid off June 23, including 2,771

"classified" employees,

rank-and-file workers under the oversight of the Civil Service

Commission.

The workers are able to reapply for their jobs with the new hospital managers, though it remains unclear how many will be

rehired and whether they will take pay and benefits cuts under the privatization deals.